Exhibit: Women of Valor
Introduction
1781 Birth
1798 Yellow Fever Epidemic
1799 Literary Activities
1800 Nurses Father
1801 Female Association
1808 Deaths & Marriages
1815 Philadelphia Orphan Asylum
1818 Family Religious School
1819 Female Hebrew Benevolent Society
1821 Ivanhoe Legend
1823 Takes in Sister's Children
1832 Religious Tolerance
1838 Hebrew Sunday School
1855 Jewish Foster Home
1861 Civil War
1869 Legacy

1818   Family Religious School

Gratz became increasingly concerned about religious issues after her sister Sarah's death in 1817. In response to the burgeoning Christian Sunday School movement and increased religious fervor, Gratz began to perceive a need for Jewish education among women and children. In 1818, she began a small religious school for her siblings and their children. Although this early experiment did not expand beyond her family members, it convinced Gratz that this kind of training was essential for Jews living as minorities in a Christian world. Bar Mitzvah preparation and private tutorials were the only avenues of formal Jewish education available for boys, and there were none at all for girls. The family school became the prototype for the Hebrew Sunday School that Gratz would establish twenty years later.


source | full image


source | full image


Next—Female Hebrew Benevolent Society


How to Cite This Page
For a bibliography: Jewish Women's Archive. "JWA - Rebecca Gratz - Family Religious School." <http://jwa.org/exhibits/wov/gratz/rg8.html>.

For a footnote: Jewish Women's Archive, "JWA - Rebecca Gratz - Family Religious School," <http://jwa.org/exhibits/wov/gratz/rg8.html>.


Discover > Exhibits > Women of Valor > Rebecca Gratz